New Bank of England Governor Mark Carney's wife: an eco-warrior who says banks are rotten … The British wife of the new Bank of England Governor is a strident environmental activist who urges people to spend less money on possessions, and once declared: "Having more stuff does not make us happy." Diana Carney has expressed sympathy for the anti-banking Occupy movement and suggested that global financial institutions are "rotten or inadequate". She has described the notion that humans should halt all consumption to save the environment as a "good point" but "very hard given the way our societies function", and has also lamented the "relentless exhortations to buy and the fact that much of our sense of self is tied up in our possessions" – UK Telegraph

Dominant Social Theme: Green thinking is necessary.

Free-Market Analysis: The wife of the head of the Bank of England, one of the most important posts in banking circles, sounds like an out and out Luddite.

This is most imporant information because it provides us with yet another insight into the belief systems of banking elites. Here is the definition of a Luddite … courtesy, Wikipedia:

The Luddites were 19th-century English textile artisans who violently protested against the machinery introduced during the Industrial Revolution that made it possible to replace them with less-skilled, low-wage labourers, leaving them without work. Historian Eric Hobsbawm has called their machine wrecking "collective bargaining by riot", which had been a tactic used in Britain since the Restoration, as the scattering of manufactories throughout the country made large-scale strikes impractical.

The movement was named after Ned Ludd, a youth who had allegedly smashed two stocking frames 30 years earlier, and whose name had become emblematic of machine destroyers. The name evolved into the imaginary General Ludd or King Ludd, a figure who, like Robin Hood, was reputed to live in Sherwood Forest.

Ms. Carney does not consider modern industrial society to be very desirable. She is against banking and modern farming and wants to use old-fashioned agricultural methods for farming.

She is part of a what we could call a neo-medieval movement to return the peasants to the land. Britain's Prince Charles is an exponent of this sort of thing, as well. If you compared the views of Charles and Ms. Carney, you'd probably not find much difference with the exception, perhaps, of architecture.

Ms. Carney doesn´t actually believe smaller is better. She wants bigness, just a different kind of bigness, and she wants that bigness inserted above the "little people" that she wants to look out for. Here's some more:

She is vice-president of Canada 2020, a Left-wing think tank, and reviews environmentally-friendly products. The couple, who have four daughters with dual British-Canadian citizenship, live in Rockcliffe Park, Ottawa, one of Canada's richest enclaves where their neighbours include ambassadors and executives. Mr and Mrs Carney bought their home for £800,000 in August 2003, but its value is believed to have risen substantially. Records suggest that they made £95,000 of improvements in 2009.

Ms. Carney has reportedly stated that income inequality in countries such as Canada and Britain was "the defining issue of our time." To combat this defining issue, she endorses the Soros-funded Occupy Wall Street movment that is an evident and obvious false flag. "The grass is always greener on the other side and the Occupy movement has provided a voice to many unhappy people."

Not only that but the Telegraph article excerpted above tells us that she is critical of "top earners" – presumably including her husband. "I perceive a fear that the institutions that underpin our country and the global system are either threatened, rotten or inadequate to face down the challenges of the future."

Within this context, then, we can see Ms. Carney is not only anti-industry; she is part of a process that is whipping up resentment against wealthy people.

These wealthy people are NOT the source of trouble in the world. There seems to be a tiny elite clique of banking families and facilitators that has pursued an intergenerational conspiracy to create world government. It is to their advantage to reposition social envy and anger so as to create a class war that virtually excuses them while blaming a larger class of rich individuals for the mischief being plotted at the very top.

Ms. Carney promotes this meme whether she fully understands it or not. She is a redistributor of wealth. She wants to use the massive force of Leviathan – the elites' chosen tool – to ensure that there is more equality of income and that people do not have access to modern technology, unless the technology is of a certain retrograde kind … like windmills.

This set of beliefs is deliberately adopted. Her credentials, after all, are impressive and provide us with a portrait of a thinking woman. We learn that, "Mrs Carney … had obtained a First-class degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics and earned a Masters in agricultural economics. The couple married in 1995, before Mr Carney returned to investment banking."

Mrs Carney also urges readers of her website to live frugally. Describing herself as a "farmer's daughter" she wears recycled vegan shoes, describes environmentally-friendly ways to tackle head lice and recommends "gardening with cow poo". "Reducing consumption, or returning it to levels that are sustainable, is critical overall," she wrote online.

This, in fact, provides us with an intimate look at the prejudices of the upper class in Britain. A very special upper class, too – a banking class that is somewhat separate from the rest of the upper classes.

Nothing wrong with either of these positions, of course. Modern monopoly fiat banking IS a big problem for the world. Modern farming does tend to destroy land and yields unhealthy food besides. But that is not the point, of course. Ms. Carney wants to use government to rectify the wrongs she believes are evident in modern society. The bigger the government, the better.

The elitist dominant social theme here is that modern Western society is sick and needs to be led back to health by an elite, banking priesthood that includes, no doubt, her husband. The subdominant social theme here is that a medieval society is mostly a desireable one and that it can, in fact, exempt certain people if they BELIEVE in the requisite nostrums.

This is how Ms. Carney no doubt justifies her own double standard. She can live in an expensive house and her husband can hold the most important banking position in Britain, but as long as she and her husband hold the "right" views, they are to be seen as good people and respectable, productive members of society.

The problem with this perspective is that it literally presages genocide. Government is simply not a force for good; it too often provides us with brutal solutions that feature destruction and even death under the justification of the "greater good."

Inherent in Ms. Carney's viewpoint is a murderous ideology. That does not mean Ms. Carney is murderous or even wants to be. Perhaps she wants the best for the world, as she says. But this larger agenda is a dangerous one.

We'll finish with the list from mysterious Georgia Guidestones. If you don't know what the Guidestones are, just research them on the 'Net.

After Thoughts

Notice the first tenet. This is where all the trouble starts.

1. MAINTAIN HUMANITY UNDER 500,000,000 IN PERPETUAL BALANCE WITH NATURE